
Mali’s fabled city of Timbuktu on Thursday celebrated the recovery of its historic mausoleums, destroyed during an Islamist takeover of northern Mali in 2012 and rebuilt thanks to UN cultural agency Unesco.
The dusty desert city formally received the keys to the precious shrines to Muslim saints dating back to medieval times at a ceremony consecrating their return that was held in the legendary Djingareyber mosque.
Al-Qaeda-linked insurgents wrecked 14 of the city’s iconic earthen shrines built during Timbuktu’s 15th and 16th century golden age as an economic, intellectual and spiritual centre.

“This day celebrates the remarkable and courageous work accomplished to recover your dignity,” Unesco’s Lazare Eloundou told the officials, diplomats and religious and traditional dignitaries attending the ceremony.
Unesco has listed the city as a world heritage site in danger due to “its important role of commercial, spiritual and cultural centre on the southern trans-Saharan trading route, and its traditional characteristic construction techniques.”
Islamist fighters destroyed the centuries-old shrines after seizing the city in April 2012, swiftly implementing a version of Islamic law which forced women to wear veils and set whipping and stoning as punishment for transgressions.